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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 1998, 18(2):763-778
Fetal Spinal Cord Transplants Support the Development of Target
Reaching and Coordinated Postural Adjustments after Neonatal Cervical
Spinal Cord Injury
Pamela S.
Diener and
Barbara S.
Bregman
Department of Cell Biology, Division of Neurobiology, Georgetown
University Medical Center, Washington, D.C. 20007
Neonatal midthoracic spinal cord injury disrupts the development of
postural reflexes and hindlimb locomotion. The recovery of rhythmical
alternating movements, such as locomotion, is enhanced in injured
animals receiving fetal spinal cord transplants. Neonatal cervical
spinal cord injury disrupts not only locomotion but also skilled
forelimb movement. The aims of this study were to determine the
consequences of cervical spinal cord injury on forelimb motor function
and to determine whether transplants of fetal spinal cord support
normal development of skilled forelimb use after this injury.
Three-day-old rats received a cervical spinal cord lesion at C3, with
or without a transplant of fetal cervical spinal cord (embryonic day
14); unoperated pups served as controls. Animals were examined daily
during the first month of life using a behavioral protocol that
assessed reflexes, postural reactions, and forelimb motor skills. They
also were trained and tested as adults to assess performance in
goal-directed reaching tasks. The onset of postural reflexes was
delayed in the lesion-only group, and goal-directed reaching and
associated postural adjustments failed to develop. The transplant group
developed reflex responses and skilled forelimb activity that resembled
normal movement patterns. Transplant animals developed both target
reaching and accompanying postural adjustments. Target reaching
requires integration of segmental, intersegmental, and supraspinal
input to propriospinal and motor neurons over many spinal cord levels.
Transplants may support the reestablishment of input onto these
neurons, permitting the development of skilled forelimb activity after
neonatal cervical spinal cord injury. The neuroanatomical
reorganization of descending and propriospinal input was examined in
the companion paper ().
Key words:
recovery of function; neonatal rat; reaching; postural
adjustments; transplants; development; behavior
Copyright © 1998 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/98/182763-16$05.00/0
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